Estate of Stone v. Comm'r

2003 T.C. Memo. 309, 86 T.C.M. 551, 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 312
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2003
DocketNo. 13647-01; No. 14195-01
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2003 T.C. Memo. 309 (Estate of Stone v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Stone v. Comm'r, 2003 T.C. Memo. 309, 86 T.C.M. 551, 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 312 (tax 2003).

Opinion

ESTATE OF EUGENE E. STONE, III, DECEASED, C. RIVERS STONE, E.E. STONE, IV, MARY STONE FRASER & ROSALIE STONE MORRIS, CO-PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent ESTATE OF ALLENE W. STONE, DECEASED, C. RIVERS STONE, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Estate of Stone v. Comm'r
No. 13647-01; No. 14195-01
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2003-309; 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 312; 86 T.C.M. (CCH) 551;
November 7, 2003, Filed

*312 None of assets owned by any of five family limited partnerships was includible in Ms. Stone's gross estate.

John W. Porter, Stephanie Loomis-Price, and Robert E. August, for petitioners.
J. Craig Young, for respondent.
Chiechi, Carolyn P.

CHIECHI

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

CHIECHI, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in Federal estate tax (estate tax) with respect to the Estate of Eugene Earle Stone, III (Mr. Stone's estate), and the Estate of Allene W. Stone (Ms. Stone's estate) in the amounts of $ 3,268,401 and $ 741,809, respectively. The only issue remaining for decision in the case of Mr. Stone's estate is whether certain assets owned by each of five family limited partnerships (Five Partnerships) are includible in his gross estate under section 2036(a)(1). 1 We hold that none of the assets owned by any of the Five Partnerships is includible in Mr. Stone's gross estate under section 2036(a)(1). There are two issues remaining for decision in the case of Ms. Stone's estate. The first issue is whether certain assets owned by each of the Five Partnerships are includible in her gross estate under section 2036(a)(1). We hold that none of the assets owned by any of the Five Partnerships is includible in Ms. *313 Stone's gross estate under section 2036(a)(1). The second issue is whether certain assets owned by one of the Five Partnerships is includible in Ms. Stone's gross estate under section 2044. We hold that none of the assets owned by that partnership is includible in Ms. Stone's gross estate under section 2044.

             FINDINGS OF FACT

Many of the facts have been stipulated and are so found except as discussed below.

Mr. Stone was a resident of South Carolina at the time of his death on June 5, 1997. Ms. Stone was a resident of South Carolina at the time of her death on October 16, 1998.

Mr. and Ms. Stone had four children (children): Eugene Earle Stone, IV, C. Rivers Stone, Rosalie Stone Morris (Ms. *314 Morris), and Mary Stone Fraser (Ms. Fraser). At the time the respective petitions in these consolidated cases were filed, Eugene Earle Stone, IV, C. Rivers Stone, and Ms. Fraser resided in South Carolina, and Ms. Morris resided in Georgia.

In 1933, Mr. and Ms. Stone founded several successful ventures in the apparel industry. Thereafter, at a time before 1976 not disclosed by the record, those ventures became Stone Manufacturing Co. (Stone Manufacturing), a global manufacturer and distributor of apparel, located in Greenville,South Carolina. At least as early as the 1980s, Stone Manufacturing focused on sports apparel and in particular soccer apparel.

In 1939, Mr. Stone purchased approximately 60 acres of real property known as Cherrydale (Cherrydale property), located in Greenville County, South Carolina, for the purpose of relocating the manufacturing facilities of Mr. and Ms. Stone's apparel-industry business to that property. Shortly after purchasing the Cherrydale property, Mr. and Ms. Stone began to use it, except for the Cherrydale residence discussed below, as the location for the operations of that business. 2

*315 Around 1950, after having made the repairs necessary to make it habitable, Mr. and Ms. Stone along with their children (collectively, the Stone family) began residing in the house situated on the Cherrydale property, which had been built in the 1840s. (We shall refer to the house and the approximately four acres of surrounding land on the Cherrydale property where the Stone family began residing around 1950 as the Cherrydale residence.)

From at least as early as 1994 until their respective deaths, Mr. Stone lived in North Carolina on a 582.672-acre parcel of land located on certain real property known as Cedar Mountain (Cedar Mountain property), 3 and Ms. Stone lived in a villa in The Cypress of Hilton Head (Cypress villa) on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

*316 By the late 1980s or the early 1990s, the Cherrydale residence had begun to deteriorate, although the Cherrydale property was still being used as the location for Stone Manufacturing's operations. Because those operations were in such close proximity to the Cherrydale residence, Mr.

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2003 T.C. Memo. 309, 86 T.C.M. 551, 2003 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-stone-v-commr-tax-2003.